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Topic: La Casa Pizza - Omaha, NE (Read 2856 times)

I just started getting into making my own pies and wanted to see if I could pick the brains of the experts. There is a local pizza place here in Omaha, NE called La Casa (http://www.lacasapizzaria.net/zgrid/themes/10494/portal/index.jsp) that has a different neapolitan style than I have seen before. The crust is crispy and thinner, but the center is chewy. I believe they use square pans and run it through a conveyor-type oven.

I have been checking the various styles and believe it is like a neapolitan crossed with a cracker crust. I honestly am not sure. I was just wondering if anyone has ideas on how to replicate this type of crust? Should I form and cook the pie on a square cookie sheet directly on my stone? Like I said, I am very new to pizza making and have probably 3 batches of dough under my belt so far, but cant wait to make my next. Any ideas or guidance would be greatly appreciated! THanks

Thanks for your reply Mark. I understand that is definitely not authentic neapolitan, but the only reason I would say it is a neapolitan cross is because that is what La Casa's description has on their site:

"La Casa opened to serve our first pizza in June of 1953. Founder Joe Patane (seen above) and family ran out of food halfway through the evening on their first night, indicating his hunch about Neopolitan-style pizza and its popularity was correct. The third generation of Joe's family invites you to share in a part of Omaha's restaurant heritage known as La Casa, still operating in our original location at 4432 Leavenworth Street."

Other wise I would just say a thin pan style, but I am not too experienced so I am not too sure. It isn't very airy or soft and chewy, its more crisp and then a nice chewiness.

John - Thanks for your reply as well. I have attached a few more pics from the web...I haven't been there in a little while so I don't have a slice cross section. I hope it helps.

I was having withdrawals, so I had to make a quick trip. I know this is definitely not authentic neapolitan by any means, or even in the vicinity, but it is super good pizza none-the-less. I hope the attached crust cross section pics help, I think they use a sheeter? Any insight is much appreciated, I would love to be able to replicate something close if possible. Thanks again!